If you’ve ever dreamed of moving into your own lighthouse, then the government might just help that dream come true.
The General Services Administration plans to sell four lighthouses through public auctions and give away six others to nonprofits and government entities, the agency announced in a news release. It’s a record number of lighthouses up for grabs during a summertime period the GSA refers to as “lighthouse season.”
Lighthouses were once powerful beacons that helped sailors and ships safely navigate dangerous waters and rocky coastlines. But technology and GPS have replaced these coastal watchtowers, and they’ve fallen into disrepair, the GSA said.
Bidding for the Stratford Shoal Middle Ground Light Station, which sits on a submerged reef in the middle of Long Island Sound midway between New York and Connecticut, starts at $10,000. The Penfield Reef Lighthouse off Fairfield, Conn., with its 19th century aesthetics and two-story keepers quarters, starts at $50,000.

Dreamstime/Dreamstime/TNS
The General Services Administration plans to sell four lighthouses through public auctions and give away six others to nonprofits and government entities, the agency announced in a news release. It's a record number of lighthouses up for grabs during a summertime period the GSA refers to as "lighthouse season." (Dreamstime/TNS)
Also available for bidding is the Cleveland Harbor West Pierhead Light, which offers views of the Cleveland skyline, starting at $25,000, and the Keweenaw Waterway Lower Entrance Light, an early 20th century structure with 1,000 square feet of interior space at the southern end of the Portage River in Chassell, Mich., starting at $10,000.
In addition, federal agencies, state and local governments, nonprofit corporations, and educational and community development organizations can apply for six other available lighthouses at no cost. They must maintain the historic structures and eventually make them available to the public for “education, park, recreation, cultural, or historic preservation purposes,” the GSA said.
They are the Lynde Point Lighthouse, in Old Saybrook, Conn.; the Nobska Lighthouse, Falmouth, Mass.; Plymouth/Gurnet Lighthouse, Plymouth, Mass.; Warwick Neck Light, Warwick, R.I.; Little Mark Island and Monument, Harpswell, Maine; and the Erie Harbor North Pier Lighthouse, Erie, Penn.
If no organization applies or is approved for ownership, then the six lighthouses also will be auctioned.
Auction sales have ranged from $10,000 to $933,888, the GSA said.
Congress passed the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act in 2000 to protect lighthouses and help transfer them to new owners. More than 150 lighthouses have been saved, including 81 transferred at no cost to local governments and nonprofit entities and about 70 sold at auction, raising more than $10 million for the U.S. Coast Guard.
In 2011, Sheila Consaul, a communications executive in Washington, D.C., bought the Fairport Harbor West Lighthouse in Fairport Harbor, Ohio, at auction for $71,000.
Consaul described Harbor West Lighthouse to the BBC as “amazingly calm and serene and pretty much in the middle of the lake with 360-degree views of the water. At night you can see stars everywhere.” But the renovations piled up, she said.
A total renovation of a lighthouse could cost thousands of dollars. New owners should expect to have to paint, clean, and possibly restore broken or missing items in the lighthouses or set up utilities to make them livable, the GSA said.
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
Big cities have always attracted people who are starting over—or just starting out. But during the COVID-19 pandemic, a trend toward moving to suburbs emerged, especially among millennials, those who were born between 1981 and 1996.
Although suburbs are often dismissed as uncool or sleepy, they have recently become more popular among millennials as a comparatively affordable alternative to city life. Suburban areas boosted in popularity during the pandemic when more people were able to work from home, according to Census Bureau findings—so much so that suburban housing prices increased more quickly than housing in metropolitan areas during the pandemic.
Even when millennials move from cities to suburbs, though, they're often looking for some of the comforts and lifestyle habits they're leaving behind. Mixed-use walkable developments in suburbs have been a major draw for millennials who don't want to give up the ease of getting around cities. In recent years, suburbs have also seen an increase per capita of critically acclaimed restaurants, bars, and coffee shops—showing millennials that cities aren't the only places with cultural appeal. Take Somerville, Massachusetts, for example, which boasts a wide variety of well-regarded eateries and cafes and close proximity to prestigious universities as well as big area employers, like Tufts, Harvard, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In fact, Somerville ranks among the best suburbs for young millennials, according to a list compiled by New Jersey Real Estate Network using data from Niche. The list ranked suburbs—cities located outside of a principal city but still in an urbanized area—based on various factors, including access to bars, restaurants, and coffee shops; walkability; and the cost of living.
Many of the suburbs on this list are located outside major coastal cities such as Boston and Los Angeles, which have more expensive housing compared to the rest of the country. Look closely at each suburb on this list, and you'll find plenty that appeals to millennials—and maybe even inspiration for your next move.

Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
Big cities have always attracted people who are starting over—or just starting out. But during the COVID-19 pandemic, a trend toward moving to suburbs emerged, especially among millennials, those who were born between 1981 and 1996.
Although suburbs are often dismissed as uncool or sleepy, they have recently become more popular among millennials as a comparatively affordable alternative to city life. Suburban areas boosted in popularity during the pandemic when more people were able to work from home, according to Census Bureau findings—so much so that suburban housing prices increased more quickly than housing in metropolitan areas during the pandemic.
Even when millennials move from cities to suburbs, though, they're often looking for some of the comforts and lifestyle habits they're leaving behind. Mixed-use walkable developments in suburbs have been a major draw for millennials who don't want to give up the ease of getting around cities. In recent years, suburbs have also seen an increase per capita of critically acclaimed restaurants, bars, and coffee shops—showing millennials that cities aren't the only places with cultural appeal. Take Somerville, Massachusetts, for example, which boasts a wide variety of well-regarded eateries and cafes and close proximity to prestigious universities as well as big area employers, like Tufts, Harvard, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In fact, Somerville ranks among the best suburbs for young millennials, according to a list compiled by New Jersey Real Estate Network using data from Niche. The list ranked suburbs—cities located outside of a principal city but still in an urbanized area—based on various factors, including access to bars, restaurants, and coffee shops; walkability; and the cost of living.
Many of the suburbs on this list are located outside major coastal cities such as Boston and Los Angeles, which have more expensive housing compared to the rest of the country. Look closely at each suburb on this list, and you'll find plenty that appeals to millennials—and maybe even inspiration for your next move.

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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Monkey Business Images // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Minneapolis
- Population: 2,479
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
RossHelen // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Denver
- Population: 2,342
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
baranq // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: St. Louis
- Population: 8,220
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: St. Louis
- Population: 8,198
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
lzf // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Detroit
- Population: 58,368
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Boston
- Population: 35,171
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: St. Louis
- Population: 9,188
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Ground Picture // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Philadelphia
- Population: 1,407
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: San Francisco
- Population: 119,607
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: Dallas
- Population: 16,405
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: Philadelphia
- Population: 9,104
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
mavo // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Atlanta
- Population: 12,793
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: Washington D.C.
- Population: 235,764
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: Los Angeles
- Population: 92,828
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Monkey Business Images // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Atlanta
- Population: 18,143
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Gabriele Maltinti // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Los Angeles
- Population: 19,787
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
mavo // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Columbus, Ohio
- Population: 8,099
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: New York
- Population: 14,234
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Wangkun Jia // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Boston
- Population: 62,620
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
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- Closest major city: Los Angeles
- Population: 35,678
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
ConorEl95 // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Oakland, California
- Population: 12,747
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Monkey Business Images // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Detroit
- Population: 19,414
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Micha Weber // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Boston
- Population: 80,608
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
Jon Bilous // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: Boston
- Population: 116,892
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$10,000 could land you that lighthouse you’ve always wanted
cdrin // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: New York
- Population: 59,369
This story originally appeared on New Jersey Real Estate Network and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.
cdrin // Shutterstock
- Closest major city: New York
- Population: 59,369
This story originally appeared on New Jersey Real Estate Network and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.